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THE SQUATTER AND THE IMMIGRANT.

OUR EFFETE CIVILISATION. [By- Electric Telegraph—Copyright.] (Pee Press Association..' Received March 30, at 5.16 a.m. London, March 29. Mary Gaunt, the novelist, in a letter to the' Times, quotes the proverb that the frontier is hard on women and horses-. Nowhere does individuality tell more markedly than in the immigrant ; those unprepared to imitate the earliest settlers, risk something and incur some privations for their own future, had better stay and starve comfortably in Old England. The letter justifies the Australian farmers and asks whether the English mistress engaging a cook would not dismiss her on discovery she was likely to become a mother.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/OAM19100330.2.52

Bibliographic details

Oamaru Mail, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 10415, 30 March 1910, Page 4

Word Count
109

THE SQUATTER AND THE IMMIGRANT. Oamaru Mail, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 10415, 30 March 1910, Page 4

THE SQUATTER AND THE IMMIGRANT. Oamaru Mail, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 10415, 30 March 1910, Page 4

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